- I considered writing a cop for this, but it's not worth it:
there are no `[:test, :build]` occurrences in Core and this
Rust rule only applies in Core formulae.
- Some of these I bumped to `typed: strict`, some of them I added
intermediary type signatures to some of the methods to make my life
easier in the (near, hopefully) future.
- Turns out that RuboCop node matchers that end in `?`
can return `nil` if they don't match anything, not `false`.
- Previously I thought that comments were fine to discourage people from
wasting their time trying to bump things that used `undef` that Sorbet
didn't support. But RuboCop is better at this since it'll complain if
the comments are unnecessary.
- Suggested in https://github.com/Homebrew/brew/pull/18018#issuecomment-2283369501.
- I've gone for a mixture of `rubocop:disable` for the files that can't
be `typed: strict` (use of undef, required before everything else, etc)
and `rubocop:todo` for everything else that should be tried to make
strictly typed. There's no functional difference between the two as
`rubocop:todo` is `rubocop:disable` with a different name.
- And I entirely disabled the cop for the docs/ directory since
`typed: strict` isn't going to gain us anything for some Markdown
linting config files.
- This means that now it's easier to track what needs to be done rather
than relying on checklists of files in our big Sorbet issue:
```shell
$ git grep 'typed: true # rubocop:todo Sorbet/StrictSigil' | wc -l
268
```
- And this is confirmed working for new files:
```shell
$ git status
On branch use-rubocop-for-sorbet-strict-sigils
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
Library/Homebrew/bad.rb
Library/Homebrew/good.rb
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
$ brew style
Offenses:
bad.rb:1:1: C: Sorbet/StrictSigil: Sorbet sigil should be at least strict got true.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1340 files inspected, 1 offense detected
```
Adding type signatures to `#audit_formula` methods in formula cops
would lead to verbose, repetitive signatures across the existing ~63
instances. This reworks `#audit_formula` to use a `T::Struct` for its
arguments, which allows us to use a one-line signature for these
methods.
QuicTLS is a fork of OpenSSL that adds support for QUIC. We'll probably
end up adding it to homebrew/core at some point (see
Homebrew/homebrew-core#134975), but I don't think we want to actually
use it as a dependency of any formulae in place of OpenSSL.
We ought to only allow it for software that actually require QuicTLS in
place of OpenSSL, but I'm not aware of any existing formulae that have
this requirement.
This reverts commit b4cd90a3cc47bc2f94e4449fa99b37445b878a5f.
This should never have been merged, given its extraction into PR 15062
had a reasonably long discussion and was decided against in
https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/pull/126705#discussion_r1149545828,
but I didn't realise I hadn't backed it out of PR 15060 before it was
approved and I merged it.
- These are arbitrary length limits that had a load of disables in code.
- The limits were only increasing over time rather than decreasing.
- Fixing the problematic code to be shorter would take a long time for
questionable gain since the problem has been around so long.
1. `llvm-g{cc,++}` has been gone for a long time. We don't need to check
for this anymore.
2. Also check for calling the compiler as `cc`, `c89`, `c99`, or `c++`.